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2 Corinthians, Vol. 1 (International Critical Commentary | ICC)

Publisher:
, 1994
ISBN: 9780567084255

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Overview

Dr. Thrall provides an exegetical verse-by-verse exposition and addresses all historical, linguistic and theological issues. The two volumes of this commentary now form the most comprehensive and up-to-date work available on 2 Corinthians.

For over one hundred years, the International Critical Commentary series has held a special place among works on the Bible. It has sought to bring together all the relevant aids to exegesis—linguistic and textual no less than archaeological, historical, literary and theological—with a level of comprehension and quality of scholarship unmatched by any other series.

No attempt has been made to secure a uniform theological or critical approach to the biblical text: contributors have been invited for their scholarly distinction, not for their adherence to any one school of thought.

Editors at the Time of Publication: John Adney Emerton, Charles E. B. Cranfield, Graham Norman Stanton

Original Series Editors: Samuel Rolles Driver, Alfred Plummer, Charles Augustus Briggs

The depth of analysis found in the International Critical Commentary (ICC) Series has yet to be surpassed in any commentary collection. One of the best features of this series is the extensive amount of background information given in each volume's introduction, where all of the analysis is provided before the actual commentary begins. Each volume packs more information into the introduction than you will often find in the body of most commentaries! Also consider that with the electronic versions of each volume, you will never need to leaf through the hundreds of pages in each volume searching for the passage you are studying.

Add the entire International Critical Commentary Series (59 Volumes)to your digital library.

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Top Highlights

“There must be a ‘visible’ element.675 Moses, the type of the Christian convert, had possessed a visible glory. In the case of the Christian, the thought must be that assimilation to Christ as the image of God produces a visibly Christ-like character, so that the divine image becomes visible in the believer’s manner of life.” (Page 285)

“It is by beholding Christ that believers behold God’s glory.” (Page 283)

“the treasure is the gospel of God’s glory revealed in Christ” (Page 322)

“(the letter to which Paul refers in 1 Cor 5:9, and probably the Painful Letter of 2 Cor 2:3–4)” (Page 1)

“ The canonical 2 Corinthians itself appears to be a compilation of two or more letters” (Page 1)

It is difficult to praise Margaret E. Thrall's commentary on 2 Corinthians too highly. In my notice of the first volume I called attention to Dr Thrall's immense scholarship, clarity of mind, and lucid writing. These qualities continue through Volume II…Here is everything that could be wished for in a commentary…Throughout, the text is carefully analysed, the views of a wide range of scholars are set out and judicious decisions between them made - all with a beautiful clarity. Even when the reader disagrees with Dr Thrall's conclusions, he or she will have had their understanding enlarged and be given a deeper insight into the epistle. Reading this commentary one wonders why anyone should be satisfied with anything less elegant.

The Bulletin for the Institute for Reformed Theology (Spring/Summer 2001)

The high standard of meticulously detailed exegesis displayed in the first volume of Dr Thrall's magisterial commentary is continued in its sequel . . . In all respects, this volume and its predecessor surely deserve to be regarded as one of the most impressive contributions to this fine series . . . Historians and theologians alike will find this commentary an indispensable resource for the interpretation both of key passages and of others that might at first sight look innocent of historical or doctrinal significance.

Journal of Theological Studies, 53.1 (April 2002)

Students and scholars with good Greek skills who are working on 2 Corinthians must engage with this commentary.

Foundations (May 2002)

Margaret Thrall . . . is the perfect guide to assist the reader through this difficult text. . . . After a lifetime of work on Paul, she commands an awesome familiarity with every aspect of II Corinthians and the forest of literature upon it. The ICC commentaries are renowned for their thoroughness in exegetical detail, and Thrall provides translation, textual notes, linguistic analysis and historical discussion in full . . . Thus this is an ideal commentary for those engaged in serious, detailed engagement with the (Greek) text.

Anvil, 18:4, 2001

She has completed the first of two volumes of what will become a standard work of detailed exegesis on the Greek text of 2 Corinthians and a model of thorough interaction with current scholarship.

Scottish Journal of Theology

Few of the canonical books makes such exacting demands on the commentator as 2 Corinthians. Anyone attempting to reconstruct from oblique and allusive references what had actually happened in Corinth faces unusually baffling problems, for the most part excluding all solutions save those with their degree of probability carefully quantified (as is conscientiously done by Thrall). The same is true of the cruces which stud almost every chapter. No wonder that the vast literature on this epistle is particularly taxing to interact with. All the more credit, then, to Thrall for her achievement in giving us so much, in the space available, about a document which has recently been attracting even more attention that before. Dr Thrall manages to combine remarkable conciseness with almost unfailing clarity.

—C. J. A. Hickling, Journal of Theological Studies

This is a magnificently substantial volume, the rich fruit of a super-abounding labour. This large and generous and patient work does not belong on a large shelf, but on the large desk of any who is willing to engage, no holds barred, with the mind and/or imagination of the apostle. Everyone awaits with eager expectation the next enthralling installment.

—Douglas A. Templeton, Epworth Review

A fine accomplishment and an important addition to the commentaries on 2 Corinthians.

—E. Earle Ellis, Southwestern Journal of Theology

  • Title: A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Second Epistle to the Corinthians, Volume 1
  • Author: Margaret E. Thrall
  • Series: International Critical Commentary (ICC)
  • Publisher: T&T Clark International
  • Publication Date: 2004
  • Pages: 978

Margaret E. Thrall: Was a Reader in Biblical Studies in the University of Wales, Bangor, where she had a long and distinguished career, from 1962 to 1996. She was an associate editor of New Testament Studies, and Editor of the Society for New Testament Studies Monograph Series. She was a member of the Church in Wales Doctrine Commission between 1983 and 1992, and an Honorary Canon and Canon Theologian of Bangor Cathedral.

Reviews

3 ratings

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  1. Jim Rudolph

    Jim Rudolph

    10/24/2018

  2. SEGBEAYAH K.(FELIX) DJOGBESSI
    Very Good, must have.
  3. Unix

    Unix

    8/29/2013

    This is the third time I buy this volume in Logos! The first time I bought it was on a 3-month payment plan and it used to cost $110. My finances are bad but predictable, I have income. Finally I can keep it! I don't think this individual volume goes on sale, but the regular price has dropped twice. It's excellent on interpretation, historical insights and relevant ancient primary sources, and thankfully there's also parallels for example to a book such as 2 Mc with arguments from which You can tell that the author's views are not that limited just like You can expect from academic works. There's a lot of Gk, but I've managed to get by with my limited but developing skills, hoping to peruse this volume a lot in the future, and looking forward to doing less advanced papers summaries on it on my spare time just to discuss with (a) friend/friends. (I'm going to take both Theology and Gk classes, but especially the former probably not on a very advanced level (haven't decided level).) I DON'T hold to the New Pauline Perspective, and neither does this author. With this volume You don't need much else! I have Hermeneia, and it includes a commentary on 2 Cor 8-9. As I've told on the forums chapters 10-13 are less important, and I was abundantly thanked for the advice to complement Hermeneia with this ICC volume on chapters 1-7 (as thanks for that and for recommending the Brill Septuagint Studies Collection (2 vols.) to Denise I received the Encyclopedia of Christianity vols. 1-3, 4, 5 for just the license-transfer fee $20).

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Print list price: $55.00
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